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Michael Bluth
03-20-2003, 03:57 AM
U.S. forces may use a new "e-bomb" during the expected invasion of Iraq as part of a 21st century blitzkrieg designed to render Saddam Hussein's forces blind, deaf, dumb and incapable of retaliation.

The highly classified bomb creates a brief pulse of microwaves powerful enough to fry computers, blind radar, silence radios, trigger crippling power outages and disable the electronic ignitions in vehicles and aircraft.

"They would be useful against any adversary that is dependent on electronic systems," said Loren Thompson, a defense analyst at the Lexington Institute, a think-tank based in Arlington, Va.

In modern warfare, electronics undergird virtually every weapon more sophisticated than a rifle or hand grenade. For that reason, Air Force scientists have worked for decades on a practical way of producing powerful but brief pulses of microwaves that can incapacitate electronic equipment without damaging buildings or harming people.

Officially, the Pentagon (news - web sites) does not acknowledge the weapon's existence. Asked about it at a March 5 Pentagon news conference, Gen. Tommy Franks said: "I can't talk to you about that because I don't know anything about it."

However, military analysts say a number of unclassified documents suggest such a device is ready for the battlefield.

"There's been a lot of discussion behind closed doors in the Pentagon and in the trade press that these things are now being tested," Thompson said.

According to a 2000 report by Air Force Col. Elaine M. Walling, scientists at Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico have created microwave sources that generate up to 10 times the amount of energy that Hoover Dam produces in a day.

Such powerful pulses can incapacitate electronic equipment without damaging buildings or harming people, making them an attractive weapon whenever civilian casualties are a concern.

In laboratory tests, microwave pulses can melt silicon chips, pushing their circuits far beyond their capacity to conduct electricity. But on the battlefield, even the most impressive e-bomb's effects rapidly diminish with distance. Although e-bombs' capabilities are classified, military analysts believe their range is a few hundred yards at most.

That relatively short range decreases the odds that hospitals, orphanages and other civilian infrastructure will be affected, unless they are directly adjacent to or networked with military targets.

"I think it is almost always more humane to use this compared to a conventional weapon," Thompson said.

The bombs' effects are also hard to predict, analysts say. The surge of electricity produced by a microwave pulse could go directly to the nearest bank of military supercomputers, or it could just as easily be shunted harmlessly into the ground.

"The effects are hard to focus. The moment the energy is absorbed into wiring or other electrically conductive material you don't know where it's going to go," Thompson said.

Those uncertainties and others may prevent e-bombs from playing a major role in the anticipated U.S. offensive against Iraq, said Lt. Col. Piers Wood, a military analyst at the defense policy think-tank globalsecurity.org.

"There will be a few commanders who will see these and get to try them out," Wood said. "We're not talking about arsenals of these things."

Defense experts are particularly eager to see if e-bombs can reach into deep underground bunkers that could otherwise be neutralized only by tactical nuclear weapons. By shutting off the electricity, a microwave weapon could render a bunker uninhabitable by disabling lighting, security systems, ventilation and computers.

Eventually, Wood said, other nations may acquire high power microwave weapons; American forces, which depend so heavily on technology, would be particularly vulnerable to them. He predicted that soon all military electronics will have to be protected from high power microwaves by metal casings, with sophisticated circuit breakers connected to any incoming wires.


http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20030319/ap_on_re_mi_ea/e_bomb_5

Dark_Cloud
03-20-2003, 03:59 AM
yeah, ,i heard it doesnt kill people.

advancemonkey
03-20-2003, 04:00 AM
Phantagram this seems to be your fav. forum is it.
Those e-bombs sound so cool. Very quick war

Kliq
03-20-2003, 04:00 AM
If the bomb is used, it will cause devastating effects. I really hope this war doesn't become another case of "regeretting" in a few years (like nuking Japan).

Michael Bluth
03-20-2003, 04:01 AM
Originally posted by Kliq
If the bomb is used, it will cause devastating effects. I really hope this war doesn't become another case of "regeretting" in a few years (like nuking Japan).

......... you didn't read what the bomb does, did you?

yamiyuuki
03-20-2003, 04:01 AM
Do you know what it's made of? Thanks for posting that; it's interesting...

Dark_Cloud
03-20-2003, 04:02 AM
No one regrets nuking japan. if anyone was in that possition they would have done the exact same thing. Drop a nuke and kill thousands, or invade and kill hundreds of thousands. Plus the russinas would be scared

Michael Bluth
03-20-2003, 04:03 AM
I wish we didn't nuke Japan, they're still feeling the effects to this very day...........

advancemonkey
03-20-2003, 04:03 AM
Originally posted by Kliq
If the bomb is used, it will cause devastating effects. I really hope this war doesn't become another case of "regeretting" in a few years (like nuking Japan). the bomb does not kill. only zaps electronics.

Kliq
03-20-2003, 04:04 AM
Originally posted by Phantagram
......... you didn't read what the bomb does, did you?

I was talking about this little quote from the article:

U.S. forces may use a new "e-bomb" during the expected invasion of Iraq as part of a 21st century blitzkrieg designed to render Saddam Hussein's forces blind, deaf, dumb and incapable of retaliation.

No wonder some Iraqi soldiers are already surrendering.

yamiyuuki
03-20-2003, 04:05 AM
Man, I regret attacking Japan..too many civilians...

smellslikenintendospirit
03-20-2003, 04:06 AM
This is awesome. Very fascinating.

David
03-20-2003, 04:51 AM
Weird, I'm just watching a thing about the E-Bomb. It says it's really slow though which isn't very good, but it says it's good at decepting radar and doesn't give off much heat.

Relient J
03-20-2003, 05:31 AM
They've been talking about this on the news tonight, that the U.S. wants to use this early into the war. They don't want to take out the power grid however, since it'll be needed in the reconstruction period.

Michael Bluth
03-20-2003, 12:10 PM
Originally posted by Kliq
No wonder some Iraqi soldiers are already surrendering.

What they mean by that is that they won't be able to use radars, computers, guns, radios, etc., etc. They didn't mean that they'd literally be blind, deaf, etc., etc.

Batmanuel
03-20-2003, 03:26 PM
Interesting. The E-bomb might be very useful in this war.

Future Starlocke
03-20-2003, 06:37 PM
Originally posted by Phantagram
I wish we didn't nuke Japan, they're still feeling the effects to this very day...........

They're smarter and richer than we are. I'm sure they're fine... besides, it was the honorable thing to do not to run away... they must have had honorable defeat.

Michael Bluth
03-20-2003, 08:48 PM
They're richer than we are? Hell no. Only two or three countries are richer than us, and they're all in Europe; Sweden, Luxembourg, and I think Finland.

dncardman
03-20-2003, 09:19 PM
Umm...Were like Trillion of dollers in the whole.

smellslikenintendospirit
03-20-2003, 09:24 PM
Originally posted by Phantagram
They're richer than we are? Hell no. Only two or three countries are richer than us, and they're all in Europe; Sweden, Luxembourg, and I think Finland.

http://www.mrdowling.com/800gdp.html
We are still first. Luxembourg is coming close though. It's the perfect little country.

Michael Bluth
03-20-2003, 09:25 PM
Originally posted by dncardman
Umm...Were like Trillion of dollers in the whole.

Yeah, usually we are - we weren't in the hole, however, when Clinton was president. I think the most retarded thing Bush wants to do is give money to religions. Bah.